Saturday, December 15, 2012

NEWTOWN – ANOTHER PREVENTABLE TRAGEDY?




Another tragedy and we still don’t get it! Immediately, we jump to discussions of ineffective gun laws. Mental health is an issue. Certainly, school security measures are critical so that staff and students know exactly what to do during an attack; and they practice it often. Over exposure of our children to violence is a valid and needed discussion. We even discuss how schools should be more capable of spotting potentially violent students (or staff).

In our emotional efforts to eliminate these violent tragedies involving innocents, we must resist the urge to focus on only a few of the multiple complex causes. We can try to eliminate all guns in the U.S. We can initiate a “witch hunt” to track down and institutionalize anyone with a mental problem or a predisposition to violence. We can campaign against violent video games, movies and music. All aspects of this issue need thoughtful attention and effective action. This is a complex problem and demands a complex solution; one beginning as close to the source or key cause as possible. This is a social, moral and psychological issue that requires solutions based on those disciplines. Political solutions, no matter how well intended, will have no effect and may even make matters worse.

That we don’t recognize a root cause of all of this painful violence is no surprise. We have become a nation of people who largely do not hold ourselves (or those close to us) responsible for our actions. There’s always an external culprit or reason for the bad things we do. To oversimplify: “I” didn’t drop the glass and break it, “it fell” or “you scared me.”

In my humble opinion, a key to preventing many violent actions lies in the home and a functional, moral family unit.

Who could better detect potential violence, aberrant behavior, mental illness, depression, etc. than a parent or sibling? Unfortunately, just too many family members don’t care, are in denial or aren’t involved enough to detect the vital signs of tragedy in their own families. If there were guns in the home, simply properly securing them from unauthorized users would be a huge step forward.

Many parents have simply lost touch with the lives of their children. Too many children are set adrift to deal with their problems alone or within their (inexperienced and unqualified) peer groups. Parents have become non-participants in their children’s lives so are not positioned to detect behavioral trends that could lead to self-inflicted or external violence. Until we can rebuild the basic family unit, attempts to legislate violence out of our lives are bound to fail.

Certainly, firearms availability is an important issue. Vetting of potential gun purchasers must become more effective. The need for automatic and assault weapons in homes must be carefully examined. Gun owners clearly need more education about gun ownership and security. Even stricter penalties for allowing weapons to fall into the hands of unauthorized users need serious consideration.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Obama Re-Elected!

The U.S. Presidential elections are all but over and my candidate didn't win. The Republicans will have to wait another four years to try once more to apply their governmental philosophies. Where do we go from here?

Simple. We support our elected President and help him move our country forward in the many ways it must. President Obama made a great point in his victory speech by suggesting that the American people take control and get done what is necessary. We can no longer wait for our elected politicians to unselfishly represent us. Gridlock is real and won't be going away soon. There's much to do for our country and we citizens have to become the agents of change.

With all of the problems facing our great country, from both within and without, we can't afford to play party politics and scuttle the efforts of a hamstrung President. Without both the House and Senate, he just can't make things happen that need to happen. If we've ever needed non-partisan politics it's now. "Compromise" had got to become our political way of life, as we rebuild America and reassume our place at the head of the table of nations.

Seek out objective and non-political analysts in your cities and neighborhoods and listen to their sage advice. Learn as much as you can about your economy and how the U.S. fits into world issues. Then, contact your Congress and House representatives and tell them what you want. Remind them that if you don't get what you want and what the country needs, they won't be reelected (maybe even impeached). If you feel inclined, organize citizens who think as you do and make your political contacts as a group of concerned citizens and voters. Rest assured that if you do nothing, nothing will get done.

Our founding fathers wisely created a form of government that reserved the real power for the citizens. We've abdicated that power in favor of politicians we elect and then blame for inaction. Let's take our country back from the politicians and gridlock and get America moving once more. The power of consumerism is especially strong in our form of democracy and economy. Why give it away?

Thursday, September 13, 2012

When Amateurs Govern

On September 11, 2012, the U.S. State Department needlessly lost a seasoned and effective statesman, Chris Stevens, and three of his diplomatic companions in a Benghazi, Libya terrorist attack. Since then, no substantive information has been released that would even remotely explain what happened and why. Ambassador Stevens didn't have to pay the ultimate price, especially through smoke inhalation. Some serious questions need answering:

Why wasn't the "safe room" safe, allowing it to be breached (?) and filled with smoke?
Where were the security personnel? The Marines? The local security force?
Where were the smoke hoods, N-95 masks, or even gas masks?
What was the evacuation plan, if any?

Ambassador Stevens appears to have been working out of a plain house, not worthy of being called an Embassy or Consulate. The safe room wasn't safe and the evacuation "plan" so shoddy that Stevens became separated from his companions. Where was his security detail? If someone were to die in this attack, it should be security personnel and not the top guy. Everyone should have been focused on protecting him and, apparently, no one was.

Expecting an Ambassador to operate in such primitive conditions in a former combat zone, teeming with known extremists, is unconscionable and the work of amateurs. What could the Secretary of State have been thinking? So far, we've not seen anything that remotely resembles even basic security procedures. Even Ambassador Stevens should have taken some precautions to protect his staff. How many other American diplomats are sitting in targets so "soft" they could be breached with BB guns and water balloons?

This carnage is appalling and the perpetrators need to be neutralized; and fast! The fact is they did their job and the American government failed to protect its own is a time of crisis through planning, training and protective security. This incident isn't just about losing a fine diplomat, it's about the image of the United States as weak, ineffective and governed by amateurs who can't anticipate and plan; who just react.

It's clearly time to appoint a Secretary of State who does more than attend meetings. Her boss must share in the shame of this tragedy as well. Perhaps it is time to replace our current government with a whole new set of amateurs. After all, they could do no worse.

Saturday, August 25, 2012

ON GUN CONTROLS



Recent tragic multi-death shootings in America have served to showcase America’s love affair with guns and have elicited the emotional response to legislate stricter gun controls, if not to eliminate firearms ownership in America altogether (perhaps requiring a Constitutional Amendment).

CNN dedicated much effort to comparing guns per citizen in America to other countries. They even interviewed American gun enthusiasts, attempting to establish that all Americans are “gun crazy” and live in an “old West,” cowboy fantasy world of “shoot first, ask questions later.” Perhaps a few do…

With freedom, especially the kind Americans enjoy, comes increased opportunity for aberrant behavior. Crime flourishes when the counter forces are weak or tolerant. Crime can be heavily suppressed when civil liberties are suppressed (think Nazi Germany and Stalinist Russia). Not many of us would vote for that!

The American Constitution allows, if not encourages, American citizens to protect their country and themselves by bearing firearms. It’s simply impossible for armed police and security agents to protect all citizenry from insane, aggravated or terrorist attacks. If only bad guys have guns, the security balance is unfavorable to the good guys.

To repeat an old cliche, “Guns don’t kill; people do.” If someone decides to kill, he or she will use whatever weapon is available: gun, knife, poison, rock, poison gas, radiation, explosives, etc. Certainly, if guns are readily available and accessible, they will be used more frequently because of their lethality, ease of use, accuracy and range. The question that screams for answering is “Why would someone want to kill another in the first place?”

People were murdered long before there were guns. Weapons evolved from sticks and stones to knives, spears, arrows, each more sophisticated and lethal than the last. Why did lethality develop so efficiently and rapidly? The easy answers are security, aggression, deterrence, etc. I submit that humans developed weapons to facilitate their need for dominance.

Let’s briefly explore “dominance.” Since dominance is a subset of ego, it’s no real surprise that most mass killers are male. Expanding the concept of “my father can lick your father” to extremes, we try to dominate others politically, socially and religiously. “Honor” races forward as an excuse for even killing one’s own children. Conflicts, like the Hatfield and McCoy feud (still smoldering?), pit honor and dominance above all else; even human life. Killing has become a shortcut to achieving dominance, replacing tolerance, negotiation and compromise. This transition has intensified as we increasingly lose our respect for animal, especially human, life. (It’s no accident that we’re hunting or displacing one animal specie after another into extinction.)

We can’t, and shouldn’t, legislate morals. Murder is illegal because it attacks the rules of order, the rights to life and the rights to security. Whether murder is sinful is not a case for the courts. Moral strength is important to the survival of any country, but it must come from the culture, the family and the religious sectors. I submit that all three of these sectors are complicit in the violence that rages in America (and other parts of the world).

If all of the world’s guns were eliminated, murder would still prosper; albeit more slowly. We have become a folk of resorting to violence, often mortal violence, as the first solution. We tend to kill ourselves and others for insignificant reasons or we exaggerate our circumstance so that killing becomes a “logical” solution (racism, jihadism). Imagine the paradox of killing someone so we can be rewarded by God in heaven.

Unless, there are major changes to how we think and how we raise our children, the carnage will continue. If we can learn to respect life and tolerate difference in our fellow humans, we will have begun the healing process. We can keep our guns under those circumstances, or not. It wouldn’t matter.

I am confident, however, that we can improve gun control, if only to prevent some killings resulting from passion, insanity, and radicalism and coupled with easily accessible and efficient killing weapons. The cost of effective and consistent control will be expensive and must be largely carried by gun owners themselves; hence, the taxes on gun sales and ownership.

Consider a few possible solutions:

·      Raise the minimum age to purchase and conceal-carry weapons (to 25?);

·      At buyer’s expense, perform a National Agency Check for all gun buyers  (this assumes that all national law enforcement agencies exchange information); any negative, including juvenile infractions, would trigger a prohibition to gun ownership;

·      Prohibit gun ownership for all who have violated any gun regulation;

·      Require all gun buyers to complete a short psychological survey to be reviewed by a professional not under the influence of the gun seller (FBI?);

·      Prohibit gun sales to anyone who is taking certain medications, especially to control psychotic or emotional issues; require a doctor’s attest to support a waiver;

·      Require strict gun registrations to be maintained by a central national agency (the FBI?). Create a nationwide database accessible to all law enforcement agencies.

·      Place a high federal tax on new and used gun sales (50% and 30% respectively?);

·      Place an annual federal flat tax on each registered gun (eg. $100);

·      Substantially increase penalties and fines for possessing an illegal weapon (citizens and sellers);

·      Make registered gun owners fully responsible for how their guns are used. They must report stolen guns prior to the commission of a crime;

·      Pace heavy penalties on gun owners who allow a gun to fall into the hands of a juvenile or person otherwise not authorized to own a gun;

·      Place enforcement and administration of gun controls on local police with FBI oversight;

·      Make ownership of any weapon capable of automatic fire illegal;

·      Limit the number of registered guns in a household to one handgun, one shotgun and one rifle per adult family member who is living at the residence (not for each adult family member);

·      Restrict hunting licenses to only those with registered weapons relative to the game to be hunted. Check registration before issuing the hunting license.

·      Require a proficiency firing range test per gun owned for all gun owners every five years;

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Who Cares Who Mohamed Merah Was?

 Publicity is the oxygen that fans the flames of jihadism and terrorism. The French police and countless media have successfully propagated and encouraged further acts of terrorism through their prolonged and detailed coverage of the stand-off leading to the death of this vicious terrorist. Even al Qaeda received lots of great press and coverage that is sure to enhance their image as an organization with international reach. Merah is almost certainly a "lone wolf," grass roots terrorist, associated with al Qaeda only through self proclamation. There must be dozens of young, potential jihadists who were impressed by the way Merah went down; jumping out a window, "guns a'blazing." I'm sure that Merah's family and admirers will have a full scrapbook of media coverage to add to their Merah shrine; the shrine of a martyr. Do you sense that there's something wrong with this picture?

Certainly, the public needs to know about terrorist threats and acts so they can be aware that jihadists are still around. In fact, they're never going to go away, especially as long as their exploits are so skillfully chronicled, complete with names and pictures, by the media and the police. When it comes to terrorism, especially at the hands of the lone wolves, the police can't do it all. They need the eyes, ears and minds of the general public who must exercise "situational awareness." When's the last time you read anything about how to practice situational awareness, if ever? You should know a lot about it so Google it. Your observations could save a life, or many lives. You just have to learn a few simple skills and care. It's the caring part that will make you effective and valuable in the effort to combat terrorism. Give it a try.

A small, but potentially powerful, step in the right direction would be to have the media and police avoid pictures and names of known or suspected terrorists. Why enshrine them as martyrs? Why create the desire in others to step up to the terrorist window? In the business world, a company often pays huge fees to get their name or product mentioned as much times as possible in as many forums as possible. Repetition works and professional advertisers know it. Every mention of al Qaeda in the press or on TV enhances their image and improves their financing. As private citizens, we have to recognize the negatives associated with mentioning terrorists' names and publishing their pictures and stop expecting the media to feed our morbid curiosity. Think about it. Once we know the name of a terrorist and see a picture, we're not any better off. The friends and family of the terrorist, however, will use the publicity to enshrine the terrorist and recruit look-alikes. Let's work to short circuit the flow of terrorism. Every little bit will help.

Was It Racism?

I am sick at the loss of Trayvon Martin, especially because the media has disclosed something of the circumstances of his needless death. Any loss of life is devastating. I wonder, though, how many young Black Americans died since Trayvon that I know nothing about. Facts would probably support that many of them were killed by other Black Americans. Thank God, the vast majority of these senseless deaths were not racially motivated. But they happened in nearly total obscurity. That injustices exist is irrefutable. There are racial bigots that exist in all racial groups and their warped views simply can't be tolerated; zero tolerance. That Trayvon was the victim of racial bigotry just isn't clear. I wonder if Zimmerman could have made a racial assessment, given what a hoodie hides. I'm not suggesting in any sense that Trayvon's death was justified. It wasn't, and nothing can change that! This tragedy could have resulted from extremely bad judgment, fear, panic, inexperience, trigger happiness, or even anger. That race was the only, or predominant, factor just isn't clear and still needs to be established. Until then, racial rhetoric and demands for lynch-mob justice are premature and unfair. To characterize this as racial murder is as unjust as when it were true. We owe it to the memories of Trayvon to be sure his death serves to eliminate injustice and guarantee the American dream for all.

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Putting a Republican in the White House

As the Republican presidential nominee race unfolds, it pretty clear that a single nominee won't have wide enough appeal to become the next (Republican) president. CNN reports that the supporters of Santorum and Gingrich are essentially interchangeable, but will not support Romney. I suspect Paul's supports would go either way. For the Republicans to run a viable candidate against President Obama, the running mate will take on an importance seldom seen. I believe the strongest Republican position would be to field a Santorum/Gingrich ticket. The appeal combination (and combined electoral votes) just might do the trick. As the country's vice president, Gingrich would find time to really work the Congress as only he could be able to do. Let's face it, no matter what a candidate promises and feels is important, Congress will ultimately decide what gets done. In my opinion, Gingrich has the best chance of getting Congress to support the president's programs. As we've seen recently, unless one party can control both the Executive and Legislative branches of our government, gridlock sets in and no much will get done. Isn't it a dirty shame that Democrats and Republicans just can't put aside self-serving party politics to do what is good for America; to be patriots?! What a concept.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Health Care in America

If you intend to build a building on sand, you'd better lay the correct foundation. It's not impossible, but a true engineering challenge. For some reason, we insist on developing a much needed health care program for Americans without even beginning to determine if there's sufficient foundation and infrastructure to support a viable program.

The famed and ill-fated "Obama Care" was developed by politicians for politicians in a void without so much as a glance at existing programs that have worked over many years. In nearly every viable health care program there is a partnership between government, health care providers and private insurance agencies. Government's role is to control the costs of medical treatment, not allowing them to spin out of control. Health care providers must accept a relatively narrow pricing scope for their services. Insurance companies must be both protected and controlled so they can make a profit while insuring the health of America. The government needs to get into the act of collecting payments from both employers and employees. Unfortunately, there will be a time period before the health funds will mature to the point that it can pay medical costs for all Americans. During that transition period, the government has to step in and pay the bills. This simple fact makes government control of costs imperative. I hate to imagine what administrative monster would have to be created, but such a huge and complicated program can never work without strong guidance and management.

I don't have solutions. It's clear to me, however, that an American medical care program is essential and way overdue. How to keep it out of the political process will be the greatest challenge. Building a painful and radical infrastructure of price controls will be an equally challenging problem. Administering and controlling it all takes the prize as the most challenging. I wonder how close we really are and if we have legislators willing to do the non-partisan things necessary to help and protect all Americans. Somehow, I can't believe it's possible. But we must!

Republicans

This year's Republican primary race is a trip. If we could combine all four of the remaining contenders, we would have a strong and invincible candidate to face President Obama in November. Unfortunately, that's not going to happen.

Romney has very successfully demonized "insiders" and painted both Santorum and Gingrich with the broad-brush "insider" label. Even Paul is "tainted" by this image. How wrong can we be? In today's nasty political environment, an "insider" has a much better chance of getting his or her way with Congress. After all, the promises political candidates make are only as good as their ability to convince (or cajole?) Congress to pass the necessary legislation. Even then, we'll need a favorable Supreme Court to make the legislation stick.

Sound complicated? It is. Our form of government has become extremely complicated and interdependent on all three branches. No single branch can "make it happen" alone. If a presidential candidate makes a bunch of wild and wonderful promises, the reality is that they will only see the light of day if Congress so desires. Are you beginning to see how an "insider" may have a better chance of getting things done? Gingrich may not be the most favored candidate, but he is probably the more knowledgeable about how to get legislation passed. In fact, I bet he knows enough about the many secrets in Congress to get just about any legislation passed that he wants. Did you ever wonder why so many Republicans cringe at the thought of Gingrich as President?


Same-Sex Marriages

Marriage is a solemn vow between two people to "love, honor and obey." Clergy and civil authorities don't "marry" people; people marry themselves. The others are merely witnesses for either Church or State, or both. Whether same-sex marriages are "immoral" or "unnatural," as some may believe, is simply not relevant. If the vows are made, there is a marriage. If the marriage vow is broken, the culprit will answer to God.

The entire discussion of same-sex marriages stems from people who believe they can define "immorality" for others and who don't have a basic understanding of what really constitutes "marriage." To condemn same-sex marriage is to play God.

The real argument today centers not around whether there is a "marriage" between two people, rather whether laws defining the rights of married people will apply in a same-sex situation. This takes the concept out of the religious realm and lays it at the feet of the state. If a state chooses to provide legal witness, status, support and protection to same-sex unions, it's a done deal. So let's stop moralizing at the expense of others.

Abortion and Birth Control

Let's plunge into a "social" issue that's emotionally charged and generally characterized by people talking past each other instead of trying to understand the real point. There is a fine line between "what I thing" and "what I think others should think and do." If I hold a belief or position on a subject, it's mine, all mine, and I don't expect others to influence others. I do hope, however, to cause thought and enhance understanding.

I personally don't believe in abortion and believe that human life begins at the moment of conception. That having been said, I also believe in the right of a woman to choose to terminate a pregnancy for a reason that only she knows. I would argue that Beethoven's contribution to music would have been lost forever had he been aborted for some very good reasons. In the end, however, the pregnant woman must make the decision. I would resist, however, the use of taxpayer funds to support abortion of any kind, leaving that issue to organizations which are privately funded.

The recent discussions on birth control amaze me. Again, any person should have the right to use whatever birth control method that is mutually acceptable to the partner. Like abortion, birth control is a personal choice that must be financed by the individual or, again, privately funded organizations. No one should be told to use birth control as no one should be forced to purchase it for employees, family members or anyone else. I cannot support the use of government funds in any way to prevent pregnancy.

In both above issues, we tend to exercise the "freedom" so often mentioned in today's political discussions. "Freedom" is essential and should be guaranteed, not financed, by government.

Why I do This

This is new to me so bear with me as I struggle through blogger infancy. I tend to see this medium as a place to record my often passionate and emotional thoughts about a variety of issues. I hope to share a little about who I am and what I think. If you don't agree with me or see life as I do, I'm prepared to learn and to change.